Hishutash Explained
Hishutash (also written as: Hi-i-qat-taš, Hišur, Khishur, and/or Hishur) was the fourth king of the Awan dynasty and is said on the Susanian Dynastic List to have been the fourth king to exercise the kingship of Awan over all of Elam. He probably reigned sometime in the first Paleo-Elamite period . According to the Susanian Dynastic List: he was preceded by Ukku-Tanhish and succeeded by Shushun-Tarana.
See also
References
Sources
Bibliography
Journals
Web resources
Further reading
=Language
=
- Web site: 2024. Black. Jeremy Allen. Jeremy Black (assyriologist). Baines. John Robert. John Baines (Egyptologist). Dahl. Jacob L.. Van De Mieroop. Marc. Marc Van De Mieroop. Cunningham. Graham. Ebeling. Jarle. Flückiger-Hawker. Esther. Robson. Eleanor. Eleanor Robson. Taylor. Jon. Zólyomi. Gábor. United Kingdom. Faculty of Oriental Studies. ETCSL: The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature. revised. The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature (ETCSL), a project of the University of Oxford, comprises a selection of nearly 400 literary compositions recorded on sources which come from ancient Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) and date to the late third and early second millennia BCE..
- Web site: CDLI: Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative. 2024. Renn. Jürgen. Jürgen Renn. Dahl. Jacob L.. Lafont. Bertrand. Pagé-Perron. Émilie. Images presented online by the research project Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative (CDLI) are for the non-commercial use of students, scholars, and the public. Support for the project has been generously provided by the Mellon Foundation, the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), the Institute of Museum and Library Services (ILMS), and by the Max Planck Society (MPS), Oxford and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA); network services are from UCLA's Center for Digital Humanities..
- Web site: PSD: The Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary. 2024. Sjöberg. Åke Waldemar. Åke W. Sjöberg. Leichty. Erle. Tinney. Steve. The Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary Project (PSD) is carried out in the Babylonian Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology. It is funded by the NEH and private contributions. [They] work with several other projects in the development of tools and corpora. [Two] of these have useful websites: the CDLI and the ETCSL..
|-|-